Low-power circuits for providing stable voltage and current references rely on currents flowing through ultra-thin dielectric layer components for operation. A current reference circuit includes driving circuitry operative to apply a voltage to the first terminal of the component with respect to the second terminal of the component in order to cause a current to flow through the dielectric layer, and sources a reference output current that is based on the current flow through the dielectric layer in response to the applied voltage. A voltage reference circuit includes a current source which applies a current to the ultra-thin dielectric layer component, and maintains an output node at a stable reference output voltage level based on the voltage across the ultra-thin dielectric layer component in response to the current flow through the dielectric layer.
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1. A circuit comprising:
a component having a first terminal, a second terminal, and an ultra-thin dielectric layer disposed between the first and second terminals such that the first and second terminals contact the dielectric layer and are physically separated from each other; and
driving circuitry including at least one transistor and operative to apply a voltage to the first terminal of the component with respect to the second terminal of the component in order to cause a current to flow through the dielectric layer,
wherein the current flow through the dielectric layer while the driving circuitry is in operation is unidirectional, and
wherein the driving circuitry further includes an impedance device controlling the voltage applied by the driving circuitry to the first terminal of the component and operative to cause the voltage applied by the driving circuitry to the first terminal of the component to vary with temperature so as to compensate for variations in the current through the component over temperature.
16. A circuit comprising:
a component having a first terminal, a second terminal, and an ultra-thin dielectric layer disposed between the first and second terminals such that the first and second terminals contact the dielectric layer and are physically separated from each other; and
a current source coupled to the component and configured to apply a current to the first terminal of the component to cause the current to flow from the first terminal through the dielectric layer to the second terminal,
wherein the component provides a reference output voltage between the first and second terminals in response to the current flow through the dielectric layer,
wherein the current source comprises:
a differential amplifier circuit having a first input coupled to the first terminal of the component; and
an impedance coupled at an output of the differential amplifier,
wherein the output of the differential amplifier is configured to control the current source such that a voltage across the impedance tracks the reference output voltage at the first terminal of the component.
9. A circuit comprising:
a component having a first terminal, a second terminal, and an ultra-thin dielectric layer disposed between the first and second terminals such that the first and second terminals contact the dielectric layer and are physically separated from each other; and
a current source coupled to the component, including at least one transistor, and configured to apply a current to the first terminal of the component to cause the current to flow from the first terminal through the dielectric layer to the second terminal,
wherein the component provides a reference output voltage between the first and second terminals in response to the current flow through the dielectric layer, and
wherein the current source further includes an impedance device controlling the current applied by the current source to the first terminal of the component and operative to cause the current applied by the current source to the first terminal of the component to vary with temperature so as to compensate for variations in the reference output voltage across the component over temperature.
20. A circuit comprising:
a component having a first terminal, a second terminal, and an ultra-thin dielectric layer disposed between the first and second terminals such that the first and second terminals contact the dielectric layer and are physically separated from each other; and
a current source coupled to the component and configured to apply a current to the first terminal of the component to cause the current to flow from the first terminal through the dielectric layer to the second terminal,
wherein the component provides a reference output voltage between the first and second terminals in response to the current flow through the dielectric layer, and
wherein the circuit further comprises at least one of:
an oscillator circuit coupled to the first terminal of the component, wherein the oscillator circuit comprises a current reference generator circuit coupled to the first terminal and configured to generate a stable current reference based on the reference output voltage provided by the component, and circuitry configured to generate an oscillator output signal by cyclically charging a capacitor using the stable current reference; and
a power-on-reset circuit coupled to the first terminal of the component and configured to generate a power-on-reset output signal in response to detecting that a power supply level or a fraction of the power supply level exceeds the reference output voltage at the first terminal of the component.
15. A circuit comprising:
a component having a first terminal, a second terminal, and an ultra-thin dielectric layer disposed between the first and second terminals such that the first and second terminals contact the dielectric layer and are physically separated from each other; and
a current source coupled to the component and configured to apply a current to the first terminal of the component to cause the current to flow from the first terminal through the dielectric layer to the second terminal,
wherein the component provides a reference output voltage between the first and second terminals in response to the current flow through the dielectric layer,
wherein the current source comprises:
a first transistor having a first drain terminal coupled to the first terminal of the component, and having a first source terminal coupled to a first power supply node;
a diode-connected second transistor having a second gate terminal and a second drain terminal coupled to a first gate terminal of the first transistor, and a second source terminal coupled to the first power supply node;
a source-follower third transistor having a third drain terminal coupled to the first gate terminal of the first transistor, and a third gate terminal coupled to the first terminal of the component; and
an impedance device coupled between a third source terminal of the third transistor and a second power supply node,
wherein the second terminal of the component is coupled to the second power supply node, and
wherein the component provides the reference output voltage at the first terminal.
2. The circuit of
the ultra-thin dielectric layer has a thickness of 3 nm or less;
the first and second terminals are formed on opposite sides of the ultra-thin dielectric layer and are spaced apart from each other by the thickness of the dielectric layer.
3. The circuit of
4. The circuit of
5. The circuit of
a transistor, wherein the first terminal is a gate terminal of the transistor, the second terminal is a channel region of the transistor, and the ultra-thin dielectric layer is an ultra-thin gate oxide layer of the transistor;
an integrated circuit structure comprising an n-doped region, wherein a first surface of the ultra-thin dielectric layer contacts the n-doped region, the first terminal is on a second surface of the dielectric layer opposite the first surface, and the second terminal comprises the n-doped region;
an integrated circuit structure comprising a p-doped region, wherein a first surface of the ultra-thin dielectric layer contacts the p-doped region, the first terminal is on a second surface of the dielectric layer opposite the first surface, and the second terminal comprises the p-doped region; and
a capacitor structure, wherein the first and second terminals are conductive plates contacting opposite surfaces of the ultra-thin dielectric layer.
6. The circuit of
7. The circuit of
a current mirror coupled to the first terminal of the component and configured to output, at a current mirror output node, a reference output current that is based on the current flow through the dielectric layer, wherein the current mirror includes the at least one transistor.
8. The circuit of
a diode-connected first transistor of the at least one transistor having a first gate terminal and a first drain terminal coupled to the first terminal of the component, and having a first source terminal coupled to a first power supply node; and
a second transistor of the at least one transistor having a second gate terminal coupled to the first terminal of the component, and a second source terminal coupled to the first power supply node,
wherein the second terminal of the component is coupled to a second power supply node, and
wherein the current mirror sources the reference output current at a drain terminal of the second transistor.
10. The circuit of
the ultra-thin dielectric layer has a thickness of 3 nm or less;
the first and second terminals are formed on opposite sides of the ultra-thin dielectric layer and are spaced apart from each other by the thickness of the dielectric layer.
11. The circuit of
12. The circuit of
13. The circuit of
a transistor, wherein the first terminal is a gate terminal of the transistor, the second terminal is a channel region of the transistor, and the ultra-thin dielectric layer is an ultra-thin gate oxide layer of the transistor;
an integrated circuit structure comprising an n-doped region, wherein a first surface of the ultra-thin dielectric layer contacts the n-doped region, the first terminal is on a second surface of the dielectric layer opposite the first surface, and the second terminal comprises the n-doped region;
an integrated circuit structure comprising a p-doped region, wherein a first surface of the ultra-thin dielectric layer contacts the p-doped region, the first terminal is on a second surface of the dielectric layer opposite the first surface, and the second terminal comprises the p-doped region; and
a capacitor structure, wherein the first and second terminals are conductive plates contacting opposite surfaces of the ultra-thin dielectric layer.
14. The circuit of
17. The circuit of
a first transistor having a first drain terminal coupled to the first terminal of the component, and having a first source terminal coupled to a first power supply terminal;
a diode-connected second transistor having a second gate terminal and a second drain terminal coupled to a first gate terminal of the first transistor, and a second source terminal coupled to the first power supply terminal; and
a third transistor having a third drain terminal coupled to the first gate terminal of the first transistor, and a third source terminal coupled to the impedance,
wherein the differential amplifier circuit has a second input coupled to the third source terminal and to the impedance, and the output coupled to a third gate terminal of the third transistor,
wherein the impedance is coupled between the third source terminal of the third transistor and a second power supply node,
wherein the second terminal of the component is coupled to the second power supply node, and
wherein the component provides the reference output voltage between the first terminal and the second terminal of the component.
18. The circuit of
a fourth transistor having a fourth gate terminal and a fourth drain terminal; and
a resistor coupled to the fourth transistor.
19. The circuit of
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The present application claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/555,309, entitled “LOW POWER CIRCUITS AND TECHNIQUES” and filed on Nov. 3, 2011, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
The present subject matter relates to techniques and equipment to provide stable current and voltage references that are insensitive to variations in operating conditions. The subject matter further relates to providing low-power references based on currents, such as leakage currents, flowing through ultra-thin dielectric-layer components.
Many circuits benefit from reduced power consumption. This is particularly the case for devices which operate on scavenged power, such as thermally-harvested energy (via a Peltier, thermocouple, or similar device), vibration-harvested energy (through a magnet and coil, or piezoelectric transducer, for example), or photoelectric-harvested energy (via a solar cell, for example). Circuits which are powered by a battery with an ultra-low self discharge rate, for example the EnerChip solid state batteries sold by Cymbet, also benefit from reduced power consumption.
Current circuit design techniques and devices are limited in their ability to provide high performance at ultra-low bias currents due to intrinsic device behavior. For example, a low power bandgap described in “An ultra low power bandgap operational at supply as low as 0.75V” by Vadim Ivanov, et al. ESSCIRC 2011 consumes 200 nA, which is a substantial amount of current for scavenged power supplies. In some applications a continuous current is provided from an energy scavenger, and the energy is stored until a certain threshold sufficient for an operation is reached. Once the threshold is reached, the device wakes up, performs an operation, and then goes back to sleep. Reduced current requirements from supervisory-function circuit blocks such as timers, oscillators, power-on-reset circuits, voltage references, or comparators translate directly into more useful energy for performing desired functionality, such as sending or receiving a packet of data over a radio.
As CMOS technology has decreased in geometry the gate oxide thickness has been continuously reduced. For device geometries below about 0.18 um, gate leakage becomes considerable. Gate leakage from these ultra-deep submicron CMOS processes has been identified as an undesired behavior with many undesirable properties. For example, in a microprocessor, gate-oxide leakage contributes to high standby current. Other applications have identified a minimum frequency below which the transistor no longer provides current gain for certain device dimensions and bias points (see, e.g.: “Analog Circuits in Ultra-Deep-Submicron CMOS”, IEEE Journal of Solid State Circuits, Vol. 40, No. 1, January 2005, pp. 132-143).
A need therefore exists for circuits that provide high-performance at reduced power consumption, since smaller-sized scavenging power supplies could be used, since devices could be operated in lower intensity conditions (e.g., dim light for solar collection, smaller temperature differences for thermal harvesters), and since additional or improved functionality may be provided as a result of reduced power consumption (e.g., more frequent temperature measurements).
The teachings herein alleviate one or more of the above noted problems with low-power techniques and equipment to provide stable current and voltage references that are insensitive to variations in operating conditions by using currents flowing through ultra-thin dielectric-layer components to generate the stable references.
In accordance with a first example, a circuit including an ultra-thin dielectric layer component is provided. The component has a first terminal, a second terminal, and an ultra-thin dielectric layer disposed between the first and second terminals such that the first and second terminals contact the dielectric layer and are physically separated from each other. The circuit further includes driving circuitry operative to apply a voltage to the first terminal with respect to the second terminal, in order to cause a unidirectional current to flow through the dielectric layer while the driving circuitry is in operation. In one example, the driving circuitry is a current mirror coupled to the component and configured to source at an output node a reference output current that is based upon (e.g., equal, proportional to, or otherwise functionally related to) the current flow through the dielectric layer.
In various examples, the ultra-thin dielectric layer has a thickness of 3 nm or less; the first and second terminals are formed on opposite sides of the ultra-thin dielectric layer and are spaced apart from each other by the thickness of the dielectric layer; and/or the ultra-thin dielectric layer is formed of at least one of silicon dioxide, silicon nitride, a high-k dielectric material, a low-k dielectric material, hafnium silicate, zirconium silicate, hafnium dioxide, and zirconium dioxide.
In various examples, the ultra-thin dielectric layer component is a transistor, wherein the first terminal is a gate terminal of the transistor, the second terminal is a channel region of the transistor (e.g., a channel region of a transistor in depletion, accumulation, or inversion mode), and the ultra-thin dielectric layer is an ultra-thin gate oxide layer of the transistor. In another example, the ultra-thin dielectric layer component is a MOSCAP or other integrated circuit structure comprising a well formed in a substrate, wherein a first surface of the ultra-thin dielectric layer contacts the well, the first terminal is on a second surface of the dielectric layer opposite the first surface, and the second terminal includes the well. In yet another example, the ultra-thin dielectric layer component is a capacitor structure, wherein the first and second terminals are conductive plates contacting opposite surfaces of the ultra-thin dielectric layer.
In accordance with a second example, a circuit including an ultra-thin dielectric layer component is provided. The component has a first terminal, a second terminal, and an ultra-thin dielectric layer disposed between the first and second terminals such that the first and second terminals contact the dielectric layer and are physically separated from each other. The circuit further includes a current source coupled to the component and configured to apply a current to the first terminal of the component to cause the current to flow from the first terminal through the dielectric layer to the second terminal. The circuit operates such that the component provides a reference output voltage between the first and second terminals in response to the current flow through the dielectric layer.
In various examples, the current source of the circuit includes a differential amplifier circuit, wherein the output of the differential amplifier is configured to control the current source such that a voltage across an impedance coupled to an output of the differential amplifier tracks the voltage at the first terminal of the component. In one example, the circuit is coupled to an oscillator circuit, wherein the oscillator circuit comprises a current reference generator circuit coupled to the first terminal and configured to generate a stable current reference proportional to the reference output voltage provided by the component, and circuitry configured to generate an oscillator output signal by cyclically charging a capacitor using the stable current reference. In another example, the circuit is coupled to a power-on-reset circuit coupled to the first terminal of the component and configured to generate a power-on-reset output signal in response to detecting that a power supply level exceeds the reference output voltage at the first terminal of the component.
Additional advantages and novel features will be set forth in part in the description which follows, and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following and the accompanying drawings or may be learned by production or operation of the examples. The advantages of the present teachings may be realized and attained by practice or use of various aspects of the methodologies, instrumentalities and combinations set forth in the detailed examples discussed below.
The drawing figures depict one or more implementations in accord with the present teachings, by way of example only, not by way of limitation. In the figures, like reference numerals refer to the same or similar elements.
In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth by way of examples in order to provide a thorough understanding of the relevant teachings. However, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the present teachings may be practiced without such details. In other instances, well known methods, procedures, components, and/or circuitry have been described at a relatively high-level, without detail, in order to avoid unnecessarily obscuring aspects of the present teachings.
The various circuits and methods disclosed herein relate to providing stable current and voltage references that are insensitive to variations in circuit operating conditions such as temperature. The circuits and methods further provide low-power current and voltage references, such as current and voltage references based on leakage currents of ultra-thin dielectric-layer components.
The circuits and methods provide stable current and voltage references that output currents/voltages having relatively constant and invariable amplitude values. The current and voltage references are designed to maintain stable outputs independently of variations in circuit and ambient temperatures, changes in circuit load or power supply voltage, and/or any other changes in circuit operating conditions. For example, in some embodiments, a reference circuit may provide an output current with an amplitude that varies by no more than 100 pA over a range of operating temperatures from −40 Celsius to +85 Celsius, or provide an output voltage with an amplitude that varies by no more than 10 mV over a range of power supply values from +2 Volts to +3.6 Volts or no more than 10 mV over a range of operating temperatures from −40 Celsius to +85 Celsius. In addition, the circuits and methods can provide stable reference currents with very low amplitudes (e.g., in the range of 50-130 pA). In some embodiments the reference circuits provide stable reference voltage or currents using circuitry operating using very low bias currents with amplitudes as low as 50-130 pA or lower, and total reference circuit current consumptions in the order of a few nA (e.g., 1-10 nA).
Reference now is made in detail to the examples illustrated in the accompanying drawings and discussed below.
The ultra-thin dielectric layer can be formed of any of a variety of dielectric substance, and in various examples may be formed of silicon dioxide, silicon oxide (e.g., a dielectric including a silicon oxide that is not a 1:2 ratio of silicon to oxygen), silicon nitride, a high-k dielectric material, a low-k dielectric material, hafnium silicate, zirconium silicate, hafnium dioxide, hafnium oxide, zirconium dioxide, or another appropriate type of dielectric. The thickness of the ultra-thin dielectric layer is generally limited to be less than 3 nm (e.g., in a range of 1-3 nm, such as a thickness of 1.9 nm on an n-type substrate or 2.1 nm on a p-type substrate). In some examples, however, the thickness can be limited to be less than 1 nm. Other dielectric layer thicknesses may also advantageously be used, including thicknesses of more than 3 nm. In general, in a dielectric layer shaped as a cuboid having rectangular faces (such as that shown in
In operation, the ultra-thin dielectric layer allows tunneling of charge carriers (e.g., electrons and/or holes) through the dielectric layer from one electrical contact to the other electrical contact in response to a voltage or current being applied between the contacts. In some examples, the charge carriers tunnel through the dielectric layer in a relationship characterized by one or more current vs. voltage curves such as those shown in
The component 110 of
The component 120 of
While the components 110 and 120 have each been described as being formed in p-type substrates, the components 110 and 120 can alternatively be formed in n-type substrates. In an example, the component 110 would include a p-type doped region or p-well 113 and a p+ diffusion 115 while the component 120 would include a p-type doped region or p-well 123, a p+ diffusion 125, and n+ diffusions 131 and 133.
Ultra-thin dielectric layer components (such as components 100, 110, or 120) exhibit a relationship between a gate voltage and a gate current, and are such that the gate current is of a non-negligible quantity due at least in part to the tunneling of charge carriers through the dielectric layer. For example, core transistor 120 or MOSCAPs 110 formed in a 130 nm, 90 nm, 65 nm, or any other appropriate integrated circuit fabrication technology may exhibit such non-negligible gate currents. In some embodiments the mechanism for the gate current is electron tunneling. In some embodiments the mechanism for the gate current is hole tunneling. In some embodiments the mechanism for the gate current is direct tunneling of a carrier across the dielectric barrier. Tunneling is a behavior described by quantum mechanics. Many technologies have multiple gate oxide thicknesses, such that an integrated circuit may include one or more core components with thin gate oxides, and one or more I/O components with thicker gate oxides able to handle higher voltages for device inputs and outputs. These thicker gate-oxide components have substantially reduced gate leakage.
In some embodiments the gate leakage of an ultra-thin dielectric layer component is used for biasing a circuit.
In some embodiments devices 204 and 206 are fashioned from PMOS transistors with gate oxides that are thicker than the ultra-thin gate oxide of component 202, such that gate leakage currents in the current mirror transistors 204 and 206 are negligible when compared to the reference current levels. For example, in a 65 nm process, which typically has multiple gate oxide thicknesses to optimize core and I/O device performance, component 202 may utilize a 1.2V gate oxide while PMOS current mirror devices 204 and 206 may utilize 2.5V transistor gate oxides. Component 202 is coupled between the drain node of device 204 and one of a ground node (as shown in
While the component 202 of
In some embodiments the characteristic relationship between gate leakage current and gate voltage between terminals of the ultra-thin dielectric layer component is used to provide a voltage reference.
In some embodiments, the characteristic relationship between gate leakage current and gate voltage with respect to another terminal of the ultra-thin dielectric layer component is used to produce a stable voltage reference.
The circuit 400 uses a feedback loop to improve the output voltage stability produced at output node 412 over temperature. The output voltage at node 412 applies a voltage to impedance device 410 which generates a current that is mirrored via PMOS transistors 404 and 406 to core component 402. Because changes in current from the resistor result in only small changes in reference voltage, this circuit provides a substantially constant reference voltage over temperature. In some embodiments a temperature coefficient of the impedance device 410 and/or of the source-follower transistor 408 is used to provide improved temperature performance by causing the current through component 402 to vary with temperature in a manner that compensates for variations in the current/voltage relationship of component 402 over temperature. In addition, this circuit has good supply rejection as the device 404 and device 408 drop excess supply voltage over their drain/source terminals; as a result, changes (and/or noise) in the supply voltage level may result in only small changes in the reference voltage level. In some embodiments a startup circuit is not included and startup occurs based on device leakage currents. In some embodiments a small current is injected into node 412 or node 414 to ensure that a stable undesired operating point does not exist. In some embodiments the startup current may be removed after startup has occurred.
In some embodiments, a correction factor is applied to a reference voltage generated using the gate-leakage to gate voltage characteristic in order to further compensate for variations in the output reference voltage (or current) due to changes in temperature and/or power supply related operating conditions.
In the example shown, active feedback is provided by a differential amplifier comprising 2.5V transistors 512, 514, 518, 520, and 516. The differential amplifier has first and second input nodes at the gate terminals of transistors 512 and 514, and produces an output signal at the source node of transistor 516. Current source 510, which mirrors the current produced by the current source formed of transistors 506 and 508, biases the amplifier by (optionally) scaling and mirroring the current through PMOS transistor 508. In some embodiments a compensation capacitor is tied between the drain of NMOS 520 or the drain of 504 and a supply rail to stabilize the amplifier. An impedance element, such as one formed of core ultra-thin dielectric layer component 504 in series with resistor 522, is coupled between the source of transistor 516 and ground and serves to adjust the resistor current as the temperature varies.
In operation, the differential amplifier is configured to maintain equal the voltage at its first and second input nodes. In doing so, the differential amplifier controls the current source (506, 508) such that the voltage across the impedance element (formed of the series interconnection of 504 and 522) tracks the voltage across the component 502. Since the threshold voltage of component 504 is reduced as the temperature rises, current through the resistor 522 increases, partially cancelling out the voltage drop at the reference output node 524 caused by the temperature characteristic of core component 502 in response to the rise in temperature.
In general, components 502 and 504 can each be formed of one or more ultra-thin dielectric layer components such as any of components 100, 110, or 120. In various embodiments, component 504 is of the same type as component 502 (for example, they are both 1.2V transistor devices); component 504 is of a different type than component 502 (for example, component 504 is a 2.5V device or a PMOS device). In some embodiments other means of communicating the output voltage to the current generating stack is used, for example a simple source-follower circuit, instead of an amplifier.
In some embodiments, in addition to the first-order correction term provided by the circuitry of
Process variation may affect the ultra-thin dielectric layer thickness, gate-oxide thickness, or threshold voltage of the various transistors within a circuit, thereby causing variation in the circuit behavior from device to device. In some embodiments a voltage or current is measured at a time of manufacture (e.g., using a wafer probe or final test) and used to adjust a characteristic of the circuit to improve a performance metric.
In some embodiments, the value of the digital trim word is determined at a time of manufacture at which point the proper value of trim is associated with the particular unit under test. In various embodiments, circuit trim is associated with the unit under test via digital trim; blowing of metal or polysilicon fuses; laser trimming of metal or polysilicon wires; laser trim of thin film resistors; a nonvolatile memory such as flash or FRAM; one-time programmable memory such as provided by the circuit IP vendor Kilopass; or any other appropriate method.
In some embodiments, a low-power oscillator uses a gate-leakage to gate-voltage characteristic of one or more ultra-thin dielectric layer component(s) as a reference.
In various embodiments capacitor 720 is partially discharged, or capacitor 720 is fully discharged, in response to reaching the reference voltage threshold. Because the current levels (such as the current applied by transistor 718) may be made very small, capacitor 720 may be small-valued even for very low output frequencies. The use of a small-valued capacitance saves die area, thereby reducing product cost. The oscillator of
In various embodiments a low-power oscillator is trimmed for improved frequency accuracy at a time of manufacture; an oscillator is periodically trimmed in situ by comparing the number of oscillation cycles of the oscillator that occur in a number of cycles of a second oscillator with improved frequency accuracy, such as a quartz crystal oscillator or a MEMS-resonator based oscillator; an oscillator is sporadically (e.g., when a temperature change is determined to exceed a certain amount) trimmed in situ by comparing the number of oscillation cycles of the oscillator that occur in a number of cycles of a second oscillator with improved frequency accuracy, such as a quartz crystal oscillator or a MEMS-resonator based oscillator.
In some embodiments a power-on-reset circuit uses a gate leakage-current to gate voltage characteristic of an ultra-thin dielectric layer component to determine when a power supply has reached a particular threshold voltage level.
In some embodiments, a voltage supervisor circuit outputs a power on reset signal as well as one or more voltage threshold signals by comparing different taps of the voltage divider with a reference voltage. In some embodiments, a voltage threshold signal is used as a brownout detector. In some embodiments, two or more thresholds are used to generate hysteresis in the power-on-reset circuit so that a power-on-reset signal occurs until a first threshold is crossed in a positive going direction. In the negative going direction, the supply has to cross a second, lower threshold to assert power-on-reset after the first threshold is crossed. Hysteresis in this fashion is helpful to prevent a limit cycle from forming as the device draws current coming out of reset.
In some embodiments, a plurality of thresholds is used in a supply supervisor for an energy-scavenged device. A scavenger such as a solar cell provides a small amount of current to charge a capacitor until a voltage threshold is crossed. In response to the threshold being crossed, the supply supervisor initiates a sequence of events to perform a desired operation which may include one or more of: measurement of a parameter from a transducer such as temperature; sending a data packet by a radio transmitter; listening for a data packet by a radio receiver; incrementing a nonce stored in a nonvolatile memory; actuating a device; or any other appropriate action or combination of actions. By monitoring the available energy stored in the capacitor using the capacitor voltage, the supply supervisor can ensure that a sufficient amount of energy to complete a desired operation has accumulated on the capacitor before initiating the operation. An ultra-low power supervisor circuit is advantageous because only a tiny portion of the scavenged energy is required for supply supervision.
In some embodiments, energy is scavenged via a photoelectric cell constructed from one or more P-N junctions fabricated on the same piece of silicon as the voltage supervisor chip. To prevent other portions of the integrated circuit from being adversely affected by incident light, a light shield may be constructed using one or more layers of metal over the sensitive portions of the circuit. An optically transparent or translucent plastic, such as a type of plastic suitable for packaging light-emitting-diodes, may be used to encapsulate and protect the integrated circuit from the environment (such as moisture or ionic contamination) while allowing light energy to reach the photoelectric cell.
In some embodiments, a 1 mm×1 mm area is allocated for a photoelectric cell on the same piece of silicon as the voltage supervisor. Assuming an efficiency of 10%, the photoelectric cell will generate about 50 nW of power with typical office lighting. If 10 nW is allocated for voltage supervision, this would allow a radio, such as Dust Networks' LPZ600 (which consumes approximately 30 uJ to transmit a packet from power off) to measure temperature and send a packet containing this information approximately every 10 minutes using only the energy collected by incident light on the silicon chip. In some embodiments, a portion or all of the functionality of a device such as Dust Networks' LPZ600 is integrated on the same piece of silicon as a photoelectric cell and a low-power voltage supervisor.
In some embodiments, an oscillator output is used to provide a switched-cap resistor in place of a resistive element, for example device 522. A switched-cap resistor is beneficial in terms of size for large resistances. Switched-cap design is well known by those skilled in the art.
In various embodiments, PMOS devices are used instead of NMOS devices; NMOS devices are used instead of PMOS devices; the drain and source voltage of a transistor-type component 120 are of similar potential and/or coupled to each other; the drain and source voltage of a transistor-type component 120 are of different potential; the body terminal of a transistor-type component 120 is of a similar potential to (and/or coupled to) a drain and/or source terminal; the body terminal of a transistor-type component 120 is of a different potential than a drain or source terminal; the body terminal of a transistor-type component 120 is connected to ground; the body terminal of a transistor-type component 120 is connected to a positive power supply voltage; only one of the source, drain, and body terminals is connected and the other terminals remain floating.
In some embodiments, a MOSCAP with an ultra-thin gate oxide (such as a core gate oxide in a 65 nm process) is used in place of or in conjunction with a transistor-type component 120. In some embodiments, a MOSCAP is constructed with a first terminal of n-type silicon under a dielectric layer and a second terminal of polysilicon on top of the dielectric layer. In some embodiments, a MOSCAP is constructed with a first terminal of p-type silicon under a dielectric layer and a second terminal of polysilicon on top of the dielectric layer.
In some embodiments, one or more references, oscillators, and voltage supervisor circuits are included on a single integrated circuit to provide power management. In some embodiments the circuit techniques and circuits described herein are used to provide a voltage, current, or timing reference.
In various embodiments, the gate is separated from the substrate by a dielectric including silicon dioxide; the gate is separated from the substrate by a dielectric including a silicon oxide that is not a 1:2 ratio of silicon to oxygen; the gate is separated from the substrate by a dielectric including a silicon nitride; the gate is separated from the substrate by a dielectric including a Hafnium Oxide; or the gate is separated from the substrate by any other appropriate dielectric.
A detailed description of one or more embodiments of the invention has been provided above along with accompanying figures that illustrate the principles of the invention. The invention is described in connection with such embodiments, but the invention is not limited to any embodiment. Numerous specific details are set forth in the following description in order to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. These details are provided for the purpose of example and the invention may be practiced according to the claims without some or all of these specific details. For the purpose of clarity, technical material that is known in the technical fields related to the invention has not been described in detail so that the invention is not unnecessarily obscured.
Unless otherwise stated, all measurements, values, ratings, positions, magnitudes, sizes, and other specifications that are set forth in this specification, including in the claims that follow, are approximate, not exact. They are intended to have a reasonable range that is consistent with the functions to which they relate and with what is customary in the art to which they pertain.
The scope of protection is limited solely by the claims that now follow. That scope is intended and should be interpreted to be as broad as is consistent with the ordinary meaning of the language that is used in the claims when interpreted in light of this specification and the prosecution history that follows and to encompass all structural and functional equivalents. Notwithstanding, none of the claims are intended to embrace subject matter that fails to satisfy the requirement of Sections 101, 102, or 103 of the Patent Act, nor should they be interpreted in such a way. Any unintended embracement of such subject matter is hereby disclaimed.
Except as stated immediately above, nothing that has been stated or illustrated is intended or should be interpreted to cause a dedication of any component, step, feature, object, benefit, advantage, or equivalent to the public, regardless of whether it is or is not recited in the claims.
It will be understood that the terms and expressions used herein have the ordinary meaning as is accorded to such terms and expressions with respect to their corresponding respective areas of inquiry and study except where specific meanings have otherwise been set forth herein. Relational terms such as first and second and the like may be used solely to distinguish one entity or action from another without necessarily requiring or implying any actual such relationship or order between such entities or actions. The terms “comprises,” “comprising,” or any other variation thereof, are intended to cover a non-exclusive inclusion, such that a process, method, article, or apparatus that comprises a list of elements does not include only those elements but may include other elements not expressly listed or inherent to such process, method, article, or apparatus. An element proceeded by “a” or “an” does not, without further constraints, preclude the existence of additional identical elements in the process, method, article, or apparatus that comprises the element.
The Abstract of the Disclosure is provided to allow the reader to quickly ascertain the nature of the technical disclosure. It is submitted with the understanding that it will not be used to interpret or limit the scope or meaning of the claims. In addition, in the foregoing Detailed Description, it can be seen that various features are grouped together in various embodiments for the purpose of streamlining the disclosure. This method of disclosure is not to be interpreted as reflecting an intention that the claimed embodiments require more features than are expressly recited in each claim. Rather, as the following claims reflect, inventive subject matter lies in less than all features of a single disclosed embodiment. Thus the following claims are hereby incorporated into the Detailed Description, with each claim standing on its own as a separately claimed subject matter.
While the foregoing has described what are considered to be the best mode and/or other examples, it is understood that various modifications may be made therein and that the subject matter disclosed herein may be implemented in various forms and examples, and that the teachings may be applied in numerous applications, only some of which have been described herein. It is intended by the following claims to claim any and all applications, modifications and variations that fall within the true scope of the present teachings.
Juneau, Thor Nelson, Lemkin, Mark Alan
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Oct 18 2013 | JUNEAU, THOR NELSON | Dust Networks, Inc | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 031539 | /0358 | |
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